Szénási Sándor

The “two souls” of bolshevism – Interview with Ákos Szilágyi

Szilagyi expounds that bolshevism had two, equally rationally com-mited „souls", two determining trends-one realistic and another one, the romantic. (The two types are personified by Lenin and Trotski.) But neither had anything to do with Stalin: with him and his "irrational realism" a representative of the lumpen strata appeared in power. Szilagyi points to the relationship between the Trotski line and the avantguarde Russian art of the 1920s and the logic of destroying the two together by Stalin.

Társadalomkritikai és kulturális folyóirat // A quarterly journal for social critique and culture

Online Articles

An important area of social policy is child protection. Discussing the history of the problem, the author primarily puts on the scale the pros and cons of fostering in institution and in family. She confronts the concepts of child protection of the past few decades with the requirement of being "modern. Related Articles No related … Continue reading Dilemmas of child protection in Hungary→

A number of initiatives have been made by leading economists and ecological movements to replace the outdated measurement of national incomes. Here are introductions to five of these indicators. Related Articles No related articles.